A judge in the US has rejected defence requests to move the trial of four former Minneapolis police officers charged in George Floyd's death, and also ordered that all four will be tried together instead of separately.
Yesterday, Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill ruled after defence attorneys had argued that pre-trial publicity had made it impossible for the four men to get a fair trial in Minneapolis. They had also cited a September 11 hearing in which the men and their attorneys were confronted by angry protesters outside the courthouse, saying it showed that holding the proceeding in the same area where Floyd died would be unsafe for participants.
Defence lawyers had argued that witnesses could be intimidated, and jurors could be affected by chants from a crowd outside.
But Cahill said he was unpersuaded at the moment that moving the trial would improve security, and that he believes the jury can be protected from outside influences.
"No corner of the State of Minnesota has been shielded from pre-trial publicity regarding the death of George Floyd. Because of that pervasive media coverage, a change of venue is unlikely to cure the taint of potential prejudicial pre-trial publicity," he wrote.
Cahill said he was willing to revisit the issue later if circumstances warrant. Moving the trial away from Minneapolis to a less diverse area of the state also likely would affect the makeup of the jury, though the judge didn't address that issue. In a separate order, however, he said the names of the jurors will be kept confidential.
The judge also ruled in another order that the trial can be televised and streamed live from the courtroom.
Defence attorneys had also argued that the men should face separate trials, as each officer tried to diminish their own role in Floyd's arrest by pointing fingers at the other. But Cahill rejected that too, saying the complications of separate trials were too great and that trying the officers together would "ensure that the jury understands ... all of the evidence and the complete picture of Floyd's death".
"And it would allow this community, this state and the nation to absorb the verdicts for the four defendants at once," he concluded.
Floyd, a Black man in handcuffs, died on May 25 after Derek Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against Floyd's neck as he said he couldn't breathe. Floyd's death sparked protests in Minneapolis and beyond, and led to a nationwide reckoning on race. All four officers were fired. They are scheduled to stand trial in March.
Chauvin is charged with unintentional second-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. The three other former officers, Thomas Lane, J Kueng and Tou Thao, are charged with aiding and abetting both counts.
Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office is prosecuting the case, said in a statement that the rulings "represent another significant step forward" in the pursuit of justice for Floyd and the community.
"The murder of George Floyd occurred in Minneapolis and it is right that the defendants should be tried in Minneapolis," Ellison said. "It is also true that they acted in concert with each other and the evidence against them is similar, so it is right to try them in one trial."